Hye! Hurry, I got this email. Now we opportunity to earn more money from Voxant.
As we’ve made changes to our CPM rates month by month, many of you have spoken out with questions, suggestions, and concerns. We’ve listened.
As a result, we’re running a special promotion for the month of July… we’ll be offering a $7 CPM for non-autoplay video. We’ll be assessing the success of this promotion at the end of July – impression numbers for the month will help us determine how successful we can be at this higher CPM and influence our decision for how to move forward with future rate cards. For now, we’re thrilled to make you all this offer and hope it reaps great rewards for you!
July CPM rates are below (no changes have been made other than the addition of the July promotion):
Text and Image - $0.10
Referral Text and Image - $0
Autoplay video $0.50
Referral autoplay video $0.10
Non-autoplay video $7 – ONE MONTH SPECIAL PROMOTION
Referral non-autoplay video $1.00
Happy embedding.
- Angela Lauria, Director of Longtail Marketing
You can go to Voxant Blog
With a slim, lightweight design and a four line OLED display, Samsung’s 2GB U3 doesn’t look like much, but housed within the slim black chassis is one of the best flash media players we’ve reviewed. Combining excellent sound quality with all the features we’ve come to expect from such a player, the YP-U3 is a great solution for those who want music on the go.
The best thing about the U3 is its sound quality. We’ve noticed a general increase in the quality of audio produced by flash based media players in the past year or so, and the U3 is a prime example of this. Its sound is quite laid back with quick bass that doesn’t extend too deeply, giving a smooth tone. There is a lot of detail in the mid range and the highs are nicely balanced against the rest of the register. As usual we tested with a pair of high quality, third party IEMs (In Ear Monitors) for an accurate assessment, and to put it simply, this is one of the best sounding MP3 players we’ve heard.
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Sumner Lemon, IDG News Service
Tue Jul 3, 10:00 AM ET
Efforts to unlock Apple Inc.’s iPhone continued on Monday, with hackers claiming “very significant progress.”
The locked iPhone only works with AT&T Inc.’s EDGE network, and cannot be used with cellular service from other providers. Locked phones are generally used to help operators recoup the cost of subsidizing handsets for their customers, but AT&T is not subsidizing the iPhone, which is priced at either US$499 or $599, depending on the model. Instead, the phone is locked because AT&T has a five-year agreement with Apple to be the sole iPhone provider in the U.S.
Unlocking the iPhone would be a boon for users locked into a contract with another U.S. carrier, or for users outside the U.S. who want an iPhone. While initial signs indicate an unlocked iPhone is possible, hackers must first overcome several challenges. One of those involves circumventing the authentication process in iTunes that both lets users register for an AT&T service plan and turn on the phone’s features, including its camera and music player.
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BRUSSELS, Belgium)—Europe’s major consumer group BEUC said Wednesday that it feared Internet search engine Google Inc.’s takeover of online ad tracker DoubleClick Inc. would damage European Union privacy rights and limit consumers’ choice of Web content.
Their plea to EU regulators comes after U.S. consumer privacy advocacy groups asked the U.S. Federal Trade Commission to look at how the two companies, when combined, would have access to an unprecedented amount of data on consumers’ Web usage and Internet search habits.
Cornelia Kutterer, BEUC’s senior legal adviser, said the association had asked the European Commission and other European authorities to look into privacy concerns — even though the two companies have not yet requested EU approval for the US$3.1 billion (euro2.29 billion) deal. “They have so far complementary databases with private data. If they merge them, this could lead to unmatched databases of profiles,” Kutterer told the AP. “If they can combine them, this could lead to a violation of user privacy rights.”
In a letter to data privacy and consumer rights regulators, BEUC said the new company would have and could exploit enormous amounts of personal information about users as they click on Web pages and applications. “Never before has one single company had the market and technological power to collect and exploit so much information about what a user does on the Internet,” it said. “The unprecedented and unmatched databases of user profiles … appear also to be in clear violation of users’ privacy rights.”
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